HONG KONG TYCOON'S DAUGHTER WRITES FATHER: 'DADDY, I WON'T STOP BEING A LESBIAN'
#Dont think the open letter Era is only happening here in Nigeria, A Lesbian has urged her Billionaire father to accept the fact that she's a Lesbian.
The daughter of a Hong Kong tycoon
has urged her father in an open letter to accept she is a lesbian, after he
offered millions to find her a husband.
Ms Chao, right, married her long-term partner Sean Eav in France in 2012 |
Gigi Chao says Cecil Chao should
accept her partner and "treat her like a normal, dignified human
being".
Ms Chao, 33, who married her
long-term partner Sean Eav in France in 2012, also emphasised: "There are
plenty of good men, they are just not for me."
Mr Chao last week reportedly offered
to double his 2012 offer of $65m (£40m).
Hong Kong does not recognise
same-sex unions, although homosexuality was decriminalised in 1991.
Mr Chao, a property and shipping
tycoon who himself has never married, told the BBC last year that his daughter
needed a "good husband".
He said at the time that his
monetary offer for any man to woo his daughter had generated many replies from
potential suitors.
The letter by Ms Chao, a socialite
and businesswoman, was published in at least two Hong Kong newspapers,
including the South China Morning Post newspaper on Tuesday.
In it she said she was sorry that
people had been saying "insensitive things" about her father.
"The truth is, they don't
understand that I will always forgive you for thinking the way you do, because
I know you think you are acting in my best interests," she said.
"As your daughter, I would want
nothing more than to make you happy. But in terms of relationships, your
expectations of me and the reality of who I am, are not coherent."
She added that she did not expect
her father and her partner "to be best of friends". But she said
"it would mean the world to me if you could just not be so terrified of
her, and treat her like a normal, dignified human being".
"I'm sorry to mislead you to
think I was only in a lesbian relationship because there was a shortage of
good, suitable men in Hong Kong," she went on.
Ms Chao ended her letter by signing
it: "Patiently yours."
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